Repairman Jack [09]-Infernal

Repairman Jack [09]-Infernal by F. Paul Wilson Page B

Book: Repairman Jack [09]-Infernal by F. Paul Wilson Read Free Book Online
Authors: F. Paul Wilson
Tags: Fiction, General, detective, Suspense, Horror, Mystery
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this guy my problem, see if he can help me out
Well I give him all my money, every cent and that’s all right
Yeah, the repairman took my money, every cent but that’s all right
He went and fixed that problem, and now I sleep so good at night
Don’t go messin with this fella, or you’ll find a world o’ hurt
You mess with the repairman, you could find a world o’ hurt
You may think you’re havin’ dinner, but you’ll get yo’ just desserts.
This guy might be an angel, but he could be the devil too
Yeah, Jack might be an angel, or he could be the devil too
Only thing I know is, you don’t want him mad at you.
    Tom sat mesmerized as the song closed with a slide guitar solo and the sparse audience gave up an appreciative round of applause. Was that about his kid brother?
    And then he saw Gia lean close to Jack’s ear. Tom caught her whisper.
    “I don’t know what you did for that man and I don’t want to, but to have that kind of effect on a life, to make someone want to sing about you… that must be indescribable. I can see why you keep going back for more.”
    And then it all came together.
    Dad’s remark about calling on Jack if he needed someone to watch his back… then that character Joey this morning asking Tom if he could “hack” what Jack hacked… and now this blues singer talking about a ghost named Jack who slips through the cracks, and singing about a “repairman” named Jack…
    Somewhere along the line Dad had come up with the idea that Jack was a repairman… an appliance repairman. But the “R-J Blues” was about someone who fixed other things.
    R-J… Repairman Jack? Was that what it stood for?
    Had to be. Little brother was some sort of urban mercenary.
    Taking it further, Tom realized that might explain why Jack had needed him to claim Dad’s body. It wasn’t that he hadn’t wanted to claim it—he couldn’t . Because he was probably living under a false identity.
    Ho-lee shit.

FRIDAY

    1

    “Well,” Tom said as they walked away from the grave, “that’s it then. Still hard to believe he’s gone.”
    Jack only nodded. He felt drained, emotionally and physically spent.
    He was now an orphan. That had struck him like a blow as he’d watched his father laid to rest beside his mother.
    Gia clung to his arm, wiping away tears for a man she’d never met. Vicky held her mother’s hand, cheery but bewildered.
    Everyone else had left. Tom’s current wife, Terry, a shapely brunette about ten years his junior, had fled the chill to wait in their car.
    During the past twenty-four hours Jack had encountered a dizzying array of new names and faces. The parade of mourners telling him how sorry they were, what a terrible tragedy it was, how his dad would be missed. He’d met his sister’s kids and had almost lost it when he saw how closely Lizzie resembled Kate when she was a teen. Like going back in time.
    Tom’s two ex-wives—the oft-referred-to Skanks from Hell—showed up. Their splits from Tom apparently hadn’t lessened their affection for his father. Tom’s two sons from his first marriage and the daughter from his second had come along. Jack still wasn’t sure what name went with what face. Not that it mattered. Small chance he’d see any of them again.
    As they reached the curb at the bottom of the slope, a white Lincoln Navigator raced up and screeched to a halt. Four young black men jumped out, all dressed in snappy-looking suits.
    The tallest of the four, who’d emerged from the front passenger seat, looked at Jack and said, “Are we too late? Did we miss it?” His quick, dark eyes shifted between Jack and Tom. “You guys Tom’s boys?”
    Jack nodded. “Uh-huh. And you gentlemen are…?”
    He stepped forward and extended his hand. “Ty Jameson.”
    He quickly introduced his three companions. The names blurred through Jack’s brain.
    “We’re really sorry about your father. An awful fu—”—a quick glance at Gia and Vicky—”an awful, awful

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